Intersexuality

Intersexuality

Deutscher Ethikrat Deutscher Ethikrat Intersexuality OPINION Intersexuality Deutscher Ethikrat Intersexuality OPINION 23 February 2012 Published by the German Ethics Council Jaegerstrasse 22/23 · D-10117 Berlin Phone: +49/30/20370-242 · Fax: +49/30/20370-252 Email: [email protected] www.ethikrat.org © 2013 Deutscher Ethikrat, Berlin Title of the original German edition: Intersexualität All rights reserved. Permission to reprint is granted upon request. English translation: Philip Slotkin MA (Cantab.) MITI, London Layout: Torsten Kulick Cover design: BartosKersten Printmediendesign, Hamburg ISBN 978-3-941957-50-3 CONTENTS 1 OUTLINE OF PROBLEM, INSTRUctioN AND PROCEDURE 9 1.1 Subjective experiences of affected individuals 16 1.1.1 Autobiographical account: an extract from the CEDAW shadow report 16 1.1.2 Autobiographical account: an extract from the CESCR shadow report 19 2 DISTINctioN betweeN INTERSEXUALITY AND TRANSSEXUALISM 23 3 DesigNATED SEX AND SEXUAL IDENTITY 26 3.1 Biological sex 27 3.1.1 Chromosomes 27 3.1.2 Gonads 29 3.1.3 External sex organs 29 3.1.4 Hormones 30 3.2 Sexual identity 32 3.3 Gender 32 4 MEDICALLY RELEVANT foRms OF DSD 33 4.1 DSD due to atypical gonadal development 35 4.2 DSD due to androgen hypofunction 38 4.3 DSD due to androgen hyperfunction 40 4.4 Malformations of the urogenital system associated with DSD 43 4.5 Tumour risk 43 5 MEDICAL DIAGNosis AND THERAPY 45 5.1 History 45 5.2 Medical diagnosis of DSD 48 5.3 Medical therapy of DSD 51 6 RealitY OF LIFE AND QUALITY OF LIFE 57 6.1 Empirical studies of the current situation of people with DSD 57 6.2 Experience of treatment 61 6.3 Quality of life and life satisfaction 67 5 6.4 Correlation between medical treatment and life satisfaction 72 6.5 Discrimination 76 6.6 Hurdles in daily life 77 6.7 Attitudes and assessments 79 6.8 Demands for improvement of the position of people with DSD 85 6.9 Conclusion 87 7 ETHICAL ASPects OF THE societal AND MEDICAL APPRoach to INTERSEXUALITY 90 7.1 Considerations of social philosophy and social ethics 90 7.1.1 New responsibilities in the relations between man and nature 90 7.1.2 New responsibilities for sex 92 7.1.3 Substitutive decision-making 93 7.2 Recognition of suffering due to medical action 95 7.3 Diagnosis and treatment of DSD: ethical guidelines and principles 98 8 INTERSEXED PEOPLE AND THE LAW 108 8.1 Historical outline 108 8.1.1 Sex and the law 108 8.1.2 Rights of intersexed people 113 8.2 Relevant issues in the law of civil status 115 8.2.1 Fundamental considerations 115 8.2.2 Appraisal of the current legal situation in terms of constitutional law 120 8.2.2.1 Interference with the general right of personality 120 8.2.2.2 Interference with rights of equality, Article 3(3) GG 123 8.2.3 The General Equal Treatment Act 124 8.2.4 Consideration in terms of international law 126 8.2.4.1 European Convention on Human Rights 126 8.2.4.2 Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union 128 8.2.4.3 UN Convention on the Rights of the Child 128 8.2.4.4 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 129 8.2.5 Possible conclusions 129 8.2.5.1 The third sex 130 8.2.5.2 Abolition of sex registration 133 8.2.5.3 Deferral of registration of sex 135 6 8.3 Legal framework of medical interventions in minors with DSD 136 8.3.1 Introduction 136 8.3.2 Medical interventions as bodily harm: the requirement of consent 137 8.3.3 Substitutive consent by the statutory representative 139 8.3.4 Violation of the parental duty of care in the event of rejection of a medically indicated treatment 146 8.3.5 The requirement to furnish information 149 8.3.6 The accepted medical standard 150 8.3.7 Civil and criminal liability 152 8.3.8 Possible conclusions 155 8.3.8.1 Compensation fund 155 8.3.8.2 Provisions on the limits of parental consent 156 8.3.8.3 Involvement of an independent institution 157 9 RecommeNdatioNS 162 9.1 On medical treatment 163 9.2 On the law of civil status 166 REFERENces 168 ABBREVIATIONS 176 GlossaRY 178 APPENDIX 186 7 1 OUTLINE OF PROBLEM, INSTRUCTION AND PROCEDURE In December 2010 the German Ethics Council received an in- struction from the Federal Ministry of Education and Research and the Federal Ministry of Health to continue the dialogue with intersexed people and their support groups, to undertake a comprehensive review of their situation and the associated challenges with due consideration of the relevant medical, ther- apeutic, sociological and legal perspectives, and to distinguish the issues concerned clearly from those of transsexualism. The background to this instruction is the demand by the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW)1 that the Government of the Federal Re- public of Germany enter into a dialogue with intersex people and adopt measures to protect their human rights.2 1 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women of 18 December 1979; effective in Germany from 9 August 1985 (BGBl. 1985 II, 648). 2 The Convention requires states to adopt measures to implement the Convention. For monitoring purposes, it requires states to submit regular reports on the implementation status of the Convention; non-governmental organizations may present “parallel reports” or “shadow reports” of their own on these reports. The Federal Government’s Sixth State Report, dated 8 June 2007, which does not address the issue of intersexuality (Deutscher Bundestag 2007a), prompted the submission of a shadow report and a paral- lel report by the Association Intersexuelle Menschen (German Association of Intersex People) and its associated support group XY-Frauen (XY-Women) dated 2 July 2008. These reports describe the situation of intersex women in particular, illustrated by individual autobiographical accounts; contain a detailed critique of violations of fundamental requirements of the Conven- tion; put a number of questions to the Federal Government on measures to eliminate these violations; and, lastly, recommend ways of avoiding and eliminating violations of the Convention (Intersexuelle Menschen 2008). In its concluding remarks of 10 February 2009, the CEDAW Committee regrets to note that the demand for dialogue expressed by intersex and transsexual persons has not met with a positive response from the Federal Govern- ment; it calls on the Federal Government to enter into a dialogue with non- governmental organizations of intersex and transsexual persons in order to arrive at a better understanding of their concerns so that it can adopt effective measures to protect their human rights (UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women 2009). In its written report of 18 August 2011, the Federal Government gives a detailed account of the 9 In recent years the issue of intersexuality has become more visible than in the past, owing in particular to the activities of groups representing intersex people, as well as to media dis- cussions in the field of sport; on the whole, however, it still seems to be subject to a powerful taboo, and such little public debate as there is on the matter is conducted on the basis of inadequate information. With the formation of the Intersex Society of North Ameri- ca (ISNA) in 1990, which marked the beginning of the entry of intersex people on to the public stage, the fundamental prob- lem of ambiguous sex in a society characterized by the exist- ence of two sexes and the associated psychological and social consequences entered the consciousness of the public at large for the first time. This also led to critiques of the medical and legal treatment of intersex people.3 An increasing number of organizations and support groups fighting for the recogni- tion of intersex people and for more attention to be devoted to them were established throughout the world. These organiza- tions also condemn the treatment of intersexuality in medicine and its classification as a disease; they see intersexuality as in- dividual variation.4 However, sex designation where the pos- sibility of intersexuality exists has in the last few years also at- tracted attention in the field of sport in particular, on account of several high-profile cases such as those of Erika Schinegger5 or Caster Semenya6 (see Section 5.2). That said, the term “intersexuality”, as used in the public debate and on which the Federal Government’s instruction activities of the Federal anti-discrimination centre on behalf of transsexu- als (Bundesministerium für Familie, Senioren, Frauen und Jugend 2011). With regard to dialogue with intersex people, the Federal Government draws attention to its instruction to the German Ethics Council. 3 See Kolbe 2010, 18. 4 See Kolbe 2010, 144. 5 A former Austrian Alpine skier who won the gold medal for women’s downhill skiing in 1968 but was disqualified after failing a sex test and had to give up the sport. 6 A South African middle-distance female runner who was suspected of not being a woman in the 2009 World Championships, but was readmitted by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 2010. 10 to the German Ethics Council is based, is neither unequivo- cal nor undisputed. It relates to persons who cannot be un- ambiguously categorized as male or female owing to physical particularities. The term is intended to supersede older desig- nations such as “hermaphrodite” or the German word “Zwit- ter”, which may be discriminatory in character.

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